Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 10 Feb 1938, 2, p. 7

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Thumb Nail Sketches Show Pamour Dynamiters Boast â€"Well Experienced Outfit With Pamour Dynamiters definiteâ€" ly assured of a playâ€"off berth in the Porcupine Mines League, The Advance publishes a thumbâ€"nail sketch of the players on the club roster that should have morz than average interest for overy sport fan in the camp.. Pamour shown from the outset that they would have to be reckoned with for league hcnours and under the shrewd guidance of Manager Gilmore look like a real threat for the championâ€" ship. As the league stands now, the remaining three teams, Coriaqurum, Buffaloâ€"Anksrite and McIntyre are running neck and neck and eath club has a chance to qualify for the finals. The Dynamiters will be in there with fuses set for all comers and regardless which of the remaining three teams earn the right to mect them, the finals will be the "pisce de resistance‘" of the Mines season. With prepâ€"ndsrance of young players in gcod condition,â€" Pamour have a fast sKkating aggregation that can go in ind score goals. While on the ice they may appear to be smaller than some of the other Mines League teams, their average weight for fifteen men is exactly 166 pounds,. Their average age is just under 24 years. : The club must have expected to build up a team of mastodons when they hired Jerry Hammel to take charge of the training job. Hammel at ons time trained elephants with the: Barnum and Bailey Circus ard, believe: you him, getting an elephant in .shape.! is sometimes a cinch compared to.some of the hockey tsams he has seen. But seriously the genial elephant man is just as adept in conditioning human trurks, torsos and limbs as he was with the jungle giants. His proudest posâ€" sessicon is a loving cup, emblematic the world‘s championship for eleâ€" phant washing which he won in open: competition on the Sahara desert. | shoots either right <or left hand, is thirty years of age, five feet, eleven, in height, and w2ighs 165 pounds. Hails from Buckingham, Quebec. Correct name, Gerald Percy, better known as "Grease Ball." Eiephant Trainer, Boxer, Reinstated Pros and Two Home Brews Included on Club Rester. Will Give Stiff Oppoâ€" sition to Af. Comers After Clmchmg Spot in Mines League Playâ€"offs ... Born in Waterous, Saskatchewan ._.... 31 years of age . . . weight 148 pounds . . . five feet, nine inthes in height . . . came here from Atlantic City. where he played with the famous Sea Gulls team . . . Played with Watâ€" erous Intermediates in 1933â€"35 and Reâ€" gina Abbotts, 1935â€"36. â€"Goal .>. . Has a playing record as long as your arm ... . First saw the light of day in Barrie 31 years ago . .. is six fest tall and weighs 178 pounds . also takes a turn at ‘blowing the whistle as referee . . . last year played with Timmins Seniors and formerly with pro and amateur clubs as follows: Goodyear Tire, Barrie Juniors, North Bay Trappers, Toronto City Hal, Torâ€" onto Maple Leafs, Toronto Ravinas, Toâ€" ronto Millionaires, Ironwood Michigan Rangers, Boston Bruins, Philadelphia fencse.>.â€". 20 yearsof age, five feet ten andahau mchestallndmlsl'm pounds . . . shcots Jleft hended. and to be outdone by an elephant trainer, ha has more than the avcrage amount of tricks in the bag in the sport made famcus by the Marquis of Queensbury . plays defence, weighs in at 179. pounds and reaches the towering alâ€" titerde of one inch over six feet .. . born in Kitchener and played all his previcus hockey with junrior team there from 1933â€"37 . . . 20 years of age. In a form that he filled out he claims that as a hockzy player, he The following are the sketches of the varigqus players:â€" and~McIntyre Seniore *« [ ( Victoria Harbour Product ul 1935â€"3%. juniors where he played for the seasons Is Former Sea Gull Boxes as Filying Du‘chkmen . . six feet tall. Angthes Pro RICHARD ‘SQUARE â€"HEAD® TRACY prefessional tryout with Boston Bruins in 1937 . .. plays either wing or centre . e'hoats left . . . 21 years old m 146 . f:ve feet five and _ hflf inches tall . greatest trouble im sports vritem to spel} his name correctly . . . born in Kitchener where he played juntor jrom 1983 to 1936 and senior in the 1936â€"37 season. More Local Color ~ANGUS "HANK" HANNABURYâ€" Another product of the Porcupinge Camp, born in South End . . . was a member of Scuth Porcupine Seriors, NOH.A. Senior champicns in 1935â€" 36 ... played with Dome Seniors 1936â€" 37 .. .â€". had professional tryout with Tor:c ‘nto Maple Leafs two years ago . plays right wing . . . 21 years old . weighs 160 . . . h-eight., five fest and €leven inches. ' feet, one inch tall . . . had professional tryout with Boston Bruins in 1935 . . . played with Citiss Service and Young Rargers in Toronto, 1933â€"35, Port Colâ€" borne, 1935â€"36 and South Por:upine Seniors, 1936â€"37. Home Brew JOE MILLERâ€"Defence . . . suffered showder injury early in the season but expects to ‘be batck to lend his weight, stick and influence in the playâ€"offs . .. born in South Porcupine 23 years ago . . . gosrs an inch under six feet and _W°ighs 190 . . . shoots leift . . . played formerly with Timmins and So-uth Porâ€" curpine Seniors . . . datkibles in running and lazrosse as sidslines to hockey. Angels® Too RICHARD ALLEN "ANGEL" MARâ€" SHALLâ€"Fxrst trip out of the homs town of Acton but far from bsing homesick . . . Plays left wing and also takes a turn on the rearguard . . . 23 years old, weighs 176 pounds and is five feet, ten and a half irtches tall . ... played with Acton teams from 1929 tw 1935. birthplace Played with some smart hockey clubs before hitting the Poercupine Camp . with Ottawa Mortagnards from 1928â€" 33 . Atoured Europe with Ottawa All Bhrs 10932â€"33 . . . played with Ottawa Rideaus 1933â€"34 . . . was the centre ice man for Montagnards and played with Ebbie Goodfellow and Hec Kilrea, now of Detroit Red Wings in the NH.L. . weight. 180 pounds . .. 28 years old Burk‘s Falis Heard From _ MENRY ALBERT ‘SEA GULL‘ HARâ€" MONâ€"Born in Burk‘s Falls and proud of it . . . 24 years cld . . . weighs 158 pounds . . . exastly five and a half foet tall . . . plays left wing . . . has become more crafty singe his associaâ€" tion with Gravenhurst Indians for whom he played from 1932 to 1937 . . . Was on Washago R.A.R. team for the 1931â€"32 seasor.. Gravenhurst in Again CHARLES E. "BUNG" LAROCHEâ€" Has been playing hcckey for seven Â¥ears despite the fact that ‘he is only 23 . . . native of Gravenhurst . . . 23 years old . . . weighs 145 . . . five feet, Tive and a half inthes tall . . . shoots left and plays wing .. . played for Fort William Juniors 1931â€"32, Gravenhurst Indians 1933â€"37. Open Season for "Rabbit" EDWARD "RABBIT" MYERSâ€"The last of the Gravenhurst quartette . . . small but dynamic . . . plays centre and shoots right . . . 26 years old . .. scales Stratferdâ€"onâ€"Aven CHARLES "CHUCK" DELAFINIER â€"Learned his hockey in Stratford, where he was born . . . payed with Stratford Midgets 1934â€"36 ard came to Timmins to play with Timmins.Senâ€" iors 1936â€"37 . . . shoots right, Welght, 145; age, 24; height, five fest, five and a half inches. Gravenhurst Corunt LEON "COUNT‘ "BENEDLILCT" WOODSâ€"A member of Gravenhurst‘s hockey nobility . . . ‘born ‘there and played professional with New Haven Eagles in 1933â€"34 . . . back with Gravâ€" enhurst Indians 1935â€"37. Height, five feet eleven inches . . . weight, 178 . . . 140 . . . sixtyâ€"six inczhes tall . . . played with Washago . R.AR. 1931-32 and Gravemhurst Indians <1932â€"3%. CHEWING TOBACCO Was on European Tour 23 years old and six Don‘t Take a Chanee on Having Cancer Noted Specialist Gives Helpâ€" ful Advice in Regard to Dr. Little, who is managing director of the American Socicty for the Control of Canser, madse this statement at a lecture in Eaton Auditorium sporsored While psinting out the prevalence of cancer, D. Little outlined the great advances made in ressarch and declarâ€" ed that half of the 150,000 dzsaths in the United States and 11,000 deaths in Canâ€" ada in ore year could be preventec through the use cof intelligencse : and courage Early cancer, ho said, never kills anyone ‘but because of fear and ignorâ€" ance it is allowed to becoms malignant. Early canser is not a disease but an extraorgdinary healthy unit, whicth grows so fast that it eventually disorganizes the entire human system. Different types grow at different rates and so far it has been impossible to make cancer cells stop growing save by surâ€" giory, raditum or xâ€"rays or a combination o1 them. L carâ€"of 1938! Compare . . . and let your own eves prove it. | ' Notice how impressively stylish the front view is, with that beautifully rounded new radiator grille. Stand to one side and see how those modern lines are repeated in the new hood louvresâ€"and emphaâ€" sized by the fleet, low streamline of the roo{f. Glance inside and geat a new idea of luxury and comfort. Wider seats! Wider doors! Attractive new upholstery! ~Extra inches of room for rear seat passengers! Flat, unobstructed floors! Fisher Noâ€"Draft Ventilation‘! THE best Chevrolet in ‘historyâ€"the outstanding carâ€"olf 193882! Camnare _ __â€"â€"â€" and leat vour awn Slam the and hear the solid, satisfying of the symptoms of canâ€" dn understanding their great need Ct the possible symptoms, Dr. Little exâ€" and Spruce Street, Timmins "I am a commercial traveller." writos correspondent, "And Cue to endless chen Salts is the only thing t.th will do this effectively and not interfere with my work. I take a large dose of Kruschen every Saturday night and on ©unday. when I have no work to do, the Salts act on me. On weekdays I take a small dose on rising. It is necessary that I 5s ‘on my toes‘ all through the day, and this is the only way that it possibly cam be done."â€"V .L. Kruschen Saits is an excellent recipe for maintaining a condition of internal cleanliness. The numerous salts in Kruschen stimulate your internal orâ€" gans to smooth, regular action. Your inside is thus kept clear of those imâ€" purities which. when allowed to accuâ€" mulate, lower the wholc tone of the ried "hrough the blood stream or other passages to remote parts of the body, where they will become secondary canâ€" cers, Ard usually they lodge in . such dangerous places as thso lungs, the lips or the intestines." Huntingdon Glsaner:â€"If Billy Leon Thompson, eight months cold, ‘of Toâ€" peka, is not ‘spoiled it will not be beâ€" cause he lacks grandparents to do it. He has an even dozen of them livingâ€" four grandparents, six greatgrandparâ€" ents and two great groatâ€"grandmothers. Toronto Telegram:â€"What the averâ€" age man needs is a gooss capable of "thud" that tells its own story of Allâ€"Silent, AlHâ€" Steel Body constructionâ€"so safe, so soothingly free from vibration, "tinniness" and drumming. Check on all the exclusive features Chevrolet brings youâ€"from Valveâ€"inâ€"Head Engine and perâ€" fected Hydraulic Brakes to *Kneeâ€"Action and new Tiptoeâ€"Matic Clutch. Learn what owners themâ€" selves say about economy . . . "Up to 27 miles to the gallon of gas!" . . . "Néver add a drop of oil!" . . "Lowest upkeep costs in motoring!" _ Actually see the new Chevrolet for yourself, drive it and compare featuresâ€"and you‘ll not only agree it‘s the best Chevrolet in history . . . you‘ll never be satisfied with less than a Chevrolet for your money! #KOn Master De Luxe Models. . For the past two years Timmins has had English classes for adults where New Canadians may have opportunity to dearn English or to perfect their knowledge ‘of the language. While the Timmins classes are conducted under the auspices of the school board, Kirkâ€" land Lake is starting similar classes sponsored by the Council of Priendship. The Council of Friendship is an orâ€" ganizatior flourishing in Kirkland Lake and Rouyn and some other parts of the North, the purpose being to establish Kirkland Lake Atso to Have English Classes for Adults 17 PXE ST. N. Wedding Gift Suggestions Phone 800 The mest cherished gift of allâ€"â€"a silver tea service. Happy indeed is the bride who proudly serves fraom her new gog« vice â€" â€" â€" and as the years roil by ahe‘s constantly remindcd of the â€"Mcfi'- ness of the giver. Be sure to see the tif@? collection at Remus‘ Simple oclasskc to original English antiques inâ€" cluded. Prices range fromâ€"â€" IJEWELLER 8.75 to §$275. and maintain good will and friendship betwaen the various New Canadians of diffcrent origin and also between all the New Canadians and all other Canâ€" adians. The Council of Friendship has much to its credit and the establishâ€" ment of the classes in English is anâ€" other accomplishment cf merit by the t‘ization

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